Abstract

BackgroundRecently published analyses showed that computed tomography (CT) scans in pediatric patients are associated with increased risk of radiation-related cancer. These analyses were based on data collected both from either hospitals and primary care services. Study objectives were to characterize cohorts of pediatric patients in Israel undergoing CT scans in primary care compared to hospitals settings. These cohorts will be further used for evaluating cancer risks.MethodsThe present study was conducted in Schneider Children Medical Center in Israel (SCMCI), the largest tertiary pediatric hospital in the country. Data were collected directly from the listings of the pediatric radiology department for the period 1985–2005. Results were compared with previously published data on pediatric CT in the primary healthcare service performed between 1999 and 2003 in a large health organization, Maccabi Healthcare Services (MHS).ResultsDuring the study observation periods, 38,351 and 22,223 examinations were documented in 13,726 and 18,075 pediatric patients in SCMCI and MHS, respectively. Compared to pediatric patients in the primary care, patients undergoing CT scans in the hospital were more likely to be younger, to have multiple CT scans, and to be scanned in the trunk. Also, cancer-related indications accounted for nearly 50 % of all CT scans conducted in the hospital compared to only 3 % in primary care settings.ConclusionsThe results indicate major differences in the characteristics of children and adolescents scanned in hospitals compared to primary care settings. Some of these characteristics may be associated with cancer risk later in life, and should be taken into account in cancer risk assessments.

Highlights

  • Published analyses showed that computed tomography (CT) scans in pediatric patients are associated with increased risk of radiation-related cancer

  • Patients having CT scans in Schneider Children Medical Center in Israel (SCMCI) had a lower mean age at CT examination (7.7 y, standard deviation (SD) = 5.4 y) compared with pediatric patients examined in Maccabi Healthcare Services (MHS)

  • Children in their second year of life accounted for 9 % of pediatrics patients undergoing CT scans in SCMCI, compared to 3 % in MHS (Fig. 1), whereas the opposite pattern was observed at age 18 years where 9 % of MHS patients receiving a CT scan compared to 3 % of SCMCI patients

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Summary

Introduction

Published analyses showed that computed tomography (CT) scans in pediatric patients are associated with increased risk of radiation-related cancer. These analyses were based on data collected both from either hospitals and primary care services. Study objectives were to characterize cohorts of pediatric patients in Israel undergoing CT scans in primary care compared to hospitals settings. These cohorts will be further used for evaluating cancer risks. Pediatric patients are at an elevated risk for developing radiation-related cancer [10]. This has been attributed to their developing and rapidly dividing tissues, longer lifetime period at risk for developing cancer and other radiation-related diseases, slimmer body walls and reduced radiation filtering effect, as well as higher radiation exposure from a fixed set of CT parameters in unadjusted machines [11]

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